czsky/en/constellation/musca.md

952 B
Raw Blame History

name created_by created_date updated_by updated_date
Musca skybber 2021-06-29 13:12:26.974967 skybber 2022-02-11 18:37:02.559791

< A small constellation of the southern sky lying between the chameleons and the Southern Cross in the Milky Way, not visible from our latitudes. The constellation of the Fly is quite a striking feature, although apart from α muscae its stars do not exceed third magnitude. The star λ muscae is white and together with μ muscae, which is red, forms a contrasting pair in the binocular. Of the deep-sky objects in the constellation, two globular clusters that are visible to the binocular attract attention: NGC 4372 and NGC 4833, as well as a small portion of the dark Coal Sack Nebula that extends in from the neighboring Southern Cross. To the northwest of NGC 4372, there is again an interestingly curled dark filament a little bit of a degree in size - the Dark Doodad Nebula.